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Medical Robotics Magazine is the world's first and only commercial feature news magazine devoted to all aspect of the medical robotics industry- including robotic surgery, physical therapy robots, hospital orderlies, and other topics related to robotic medicine.
As a feature magazine, Medical Robotics features interviews, business news, conference coverage and editorials, as well as a generous portion of articles written by noteworthy robotics surgeons as well as clinical trials reports.
MR has been on-line since 2007, and first appeared in print in January of 2008 at the annual meeting of MIRA (the Minimally Invasive Robotics Association) in Rome, Italy. Medical Robotics Magazine is copyrighted, features a nascent Board of Editorial Advisors, and is indexed by the U.S. Library of Congress.
All contents (c) 2011 John J. Otrompke, JD
Contact: John J. Otrompke, JD
John_Otrompke@yahoo.com
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Friday, March 12, 2010

New Standards to Define Quality and Safety in Medical Robots

Meanwhile, the Quest for a Definition Goes on

By John Otrompke

A workshop convened by the FDA in Maryland last month may have heralded the creation of quality and safety standards unique to the robotics industry. The meeting, which was only a first step in what might be an on-going process, was intended to coordinate efforts already going on in standards-setting organizations, which would supplement pre-existing generally-applicable standards at the FDA.

“There are existing standards that may not say ‘robotics’ on them but a robotics manufacturer would be able to use them in the design and development of robotics,” said Carol Herman, director of the standards management staff at the Center for Devices and Radiological Health of the FDA. “Our role is to help identify where standards could help us get products to market,” she added.

Standards are voluntary, but may make the FDA certification process more efficient, Herman said. “When there are standards in place with which the FDA is comfortable because we helped develop them, it allows the reviewer to spend time on other matters,” she explained.

The meeting, which was convened by the FDA with support from Medtronic and the Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation (AAMI), was called to coordinate efforts going on in multiple voluntary standards-setting organizations.

The sort of standards under discussion are for the devices themselves, not for the manufacturing process, clarified Sidebottom, who spoke in his role with the IEC, although he is also the director of corporate standards at Medtronic. “What are the gaps a medical robot might bring which are not already covered by existing standards?” he asked.

Where do Gaps Exist?

Part of the group’s work will consist of identifying gaps in existing standards posed by the emergence of medical robotics technology. One example might be where the computer of a surgical robotics system freezes up in the midst of a surgery.

“My impression is that there are some areas of medical robotics which are ready for standards, though some areas are not developed enough. Surgical robots would probably be the most advanced, since there is already a product on the market. An example of the yet-to-be-developed would be more autonomous robots. Standards would normally not be developed at that point because innovation is still happening,” said Mary Logan, JD, CAE, president of AAMI, who attended the meeting.

Standards created for medical robotics may help solve problems in other areas of health care technology. “These would be useful not only for robotics, but for systems at a higher level of complexity which put together multiple components tied together with communications networks,” said Joel Myklebust, PhD, deputy director in the office of science and engineering laboratories at the FDA.

“Take an operating room or an emergency room, for example, and think of all the multiple devices in that room. Wouldn’t it be great if somehow all the devices were appropriately networked, if they didn’t have cables running all over the floors, and you could actually rely on the devices to all work very well together,” Herman explained.

Just as hospital room devices should be interoperable, perhaps there should be a high degree of coordination among standards-setting organizations as well. “AAMI’s standards philosophy is one standard world wide. We try not to have duplicate standards, so we participate very actively with the ISO and the IEC,” said Logan.

The Search for a Definition

Part of the group’s first meeting was spent trying to define the area to be standardized. “What are characteristics of a thing which makes it a robot?” Sidebottom asked. “We came up with motion, multiple degrees of freedom, a degree of autonomy from human control. Then you have the question, ‘What is a medical robot, as opposed to a personal care robot, for example?’” he mused.

Some attendees were bemused by the inquiry into definitions. “I’m not entirely sure what the point of the meeting was,” said Howie Choset, PhD, associate professor of robotics at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. “We spent a lot of time on definition of what a robot is, but we never got anywhere specific. We should not come up with a classification of medical robots, but should look at the question on a task-by-task basis,” he added.

Other organizations like AdvaMed and Intuitive Surgical also participated in the meeting. Another meeting could take place this year, but probably not before the fall, according to the FDA’s Carol Herman.